Parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child

Healthy dyadic interactions serve as a foundation for child development and are typically characterised by mutual emotional availability of both the parent and child. However, several parental factors might undermine optimal parent-child interactions, including the parent's current parenting st...

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Main Authors: Azhari, Atiqah, Wong, Ariel Wan Ting, Lim, Mengyu, Balagtas, Jan Paolo Macapinlac, Gabrieli, Giulio, Setoh, Peipei, Esposito, Gianluca
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144361
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1443612023-03-05T15:30:46Z Parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child Azhari, Atiqah Wong, Ariel Wan Ting Lim, Mengyu Balagtas, Jan Paolo Macapinlac Gabrieli, Giulio Setoh, Peipei Esposito, Gianluca School of Social Sciences Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Social sciences::Psychology Parenting Stress Parental Bonding Healthy dyadic interactions serve as a foundation for child development and are typically characterised by mutual emotional availability of both the parent and child. However, several parental factors might undermine optimal parent-child interactions, including the parent's current parenting stress levels and the parent's past bonding experiences with his/her own parents. To date, no study has investigated the possible interaction of parenting stress and parental bonding history with their own parents on the quality of emotional availability during play interactions. In this study, 29 father-child dyads (18 boys, 11 girls; father's age = 38.07 years, child's age = 42.21 months) and 36 mother-child dyads (21 boys, 15 girls; mother's age = 34.75 years, child's age = 41.72 months) from different families were recruited to participate in a 10-min play session after reporting on their current parenting stress and past care and overprotection experience with their parents. We measured the emotional availability of mother-child and father-child play across four adult subscales (i.e., sensitivity, structuring, non-intrusiveness, non-hostility) and two child subscales (i.e., involvement and responsiveness). Regression slope analyses showed that parenting stress stemming from having a difficult child predicts adult non-hostility, and is moderated by the parents' previously experienced maternal overprotection. When parenting stress is low, higher maternal overprotection experienced by the parent in the past would predict greater non-hostility during play. This finding suggests that parents' present stress levels and past bonding experiences with their parents interact to influence the quality of dyadic interaction with their child. Ministry of Education (MOE) Nanyang Technological University Published version This work was supported by the the Singapore’s Children Society (AA), the 2015 NAP Start-up Grant M4081597 (GE) from Nanyang Technological University Singapore, the Ministry of Education Tier-1 Grant RG55/18 2018-T1-001-172 (GE), the Ministry of Education Tier-1 Grant RG55/15 (PS) and the Singapore Ministry of Education Social Science Research Thematic Grant (MOE2016-SSRTG-017, PS). 2020-11-02T02:02:09Z 2020-11-02T02:02:09Z 2020 Journal Article Azhari, A., Wong, A. W. T., Lim, M., Balagtas, J. P. M., Gabrieli, G., Setoh, P., & Esposito, G. (2020). Parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child. Behavioral Sciences, 10(7), 114-. doi:10.3390/bs10070114 2076-328X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144361 10.3390/bs10070114 32645871 7 10 en M4081597 (GE) RG55/18 2018-T1-001-172 (GE) RG55/15 (PS) MOE2016-SSRTG-017 (PS) Behavioral Sciences 10.21979/N9/IZQPBI © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Parenting Stress
Parental Bonding
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Parenting Stress
Parental Bonding
Azhari, Atiqah
Wong, Ariel Wan Ting
Lim, Mengyu
Balagtas, Jan Paolo Macapinlac
Gabrieli, Giulio
Setoh, Peipei
Esposito, Gianluca
Parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child
description Healthy dyadic interactions serve as a foundation for child development and are typically characterised by mutual emotional availability of both the parent and child. However, several parental factors might undermine optimal parent-child interactions, including the parent's current parenting stress levels and the parent's past bonding experiences with his/her own parents. To date, no study has investigated the possible interaction of parenting stress and parental bonding history with their own parents on the quality of emotional availability during play interactions. In this study, 29 father-child dyads (18 boys, 11 girls; father's age = 38.07 years, child's age = 42.21 months) and 36 mother-child dyads (21 boys, 15 girls; mother's age = 34.75 years, child's age = 41.72 months) from different families were recruited to participate in a 10-min play session after reporting on their current parenting stress and past care and overprotection experience with their parents. We measured the emotional availability of mother-child and father-child play across four adult subscales (i.e., sensitivity, structuring, non-intrusiveness, non-hostility) and two child subscales (i.e., involvement and responsiveness). Regression slope analyses showed that parenting stress stemming from having a difficult child predicts adult non-hostility, and is moderated by the parents' previously experienced maternal overprotection. When parenting stress is low, higher maternal overprotection experienced by the parent in the past would predict greater non-hostility during play. This finding suggests that parents' present stress levels and past bonding experiences with their parents interact to influence the quality of dyadic interaction with their child.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Azhari, Atiqah
Wong, Ariel Wan Ting
Lim, Mengyu
Balagtas, Jan Paolo Macapinlac
Gabrieli, Giulio
Setoh, Peipei
Esposito, Gianluca
format Article
author Azhari, Atiqah
Wong, Ariel Wan Ting
Lim, Mengyu
Balagtas, Jan Paolo Macapinlac
Gabrieli, Giulio
Setoh, Peipei
Esposito, Gianluca
author_sort Azhari, Atiqah
title Parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child
title_short Parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child
title_full Parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child
title_fullStr Parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child
title_full_unstemmed Parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child
title_sort parents' past bonding experience with their parents interacts with current parenting stress to influence the quality of interaction with their child
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144361
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